Pet Birds And Their Benefits

By Brenda Briggs

When you put down your little backyard ecosystem with flowering bushes, a tree and a patch of grass, you might have hoped for a better class of animal visitor than moles and the odd rabbit. But we just need to look heavenward and there is an astounding variety of birds that flit in and out, hoping to be seen only by people who want to, badly enough. The Discovery Channel keeps zooming in on little birds and animals and using human emotions to describe all that they get up to. Is it possible for the casual animal lover to see all these emotions on display in the antics of our backyard birds?

Bird courtship is about the most rewarding area to deal in for the watcher of backyard birds. Mating season for birds is the colorful in the year, a time when birds sing and dance around each other hoping to find the best possible mate. Even the common species you find around your backyard, woodpeckers, orioles, buntings, cardinals and others have fascinating mating behavior. Even people unfamiliar with birds tend to recognize the woodpecker's courtship ritual, noisy as they are: they drum out a beat around lose roof tiles, rain gutters and such in a really noisy way. Among the cardinals, the ritual happens around how the male brings tasty morsels to feed the coquette he fancies. The gravity-defying hummingbird weaves wonderfully complex patterns flying around the female. In their varied individual ways, these birds do their very best to win a smile of approval from the ladies they set their cap on.

Once partnerships have been established and an egg is on its way the hectic activity begins of birds staking out territory and building individual nests. Some birds, the nighthawk for example, do not even bother to build nests; they will just hop on to your roof, find a non-sloping surface, and set their cargo down right there. But the birds that build cute little nests are much more fun. The hummingbird has that well-known cocoon-like creation made out of straw and mud; sparrows and pigeons have untidy-looking little nests of sticks, and odds and ends; they make up for their humbleness with endless sentimental family play though. Some birds have taken to the 21st-century, and scavenge for modern household waste to carry over to their construction sites. Discarded napkins, rubber bands, shredded paper, the odd piece of shiny tinsel and jewelry, have all been found in nests built on the roofs and trees around homes by backyard birds. Of course it would be no use building a home if a bird were not willing to defend it. Birds can often be remarkably territorial; some birds, the robin for example, have trouble standing the sight of any other robin in the entire plot of land. But they can be very welcoming of their friends, once the nesting season is over with. Sparrows happen to be much less ambitious, and don't mind other sparrows building in the vicinity. You should try to see birds of every feather sing and dance around their domicile, to advertise that no one is to have ideas about their area.

After this, begins the actual hatching process and all the wonderful family drama that ensues. The parents anxiously keep guard all the time; if you want to lean in for a closer look, make sure you don't touch anything. Parent birds are known to often inexplicably abandon their hatchlings if humans disturb them. Feeding the hatchlings of your backyard birds might seem quite adorable: but that really is a strict no-no. Sometimes a parent birds seems to keep their fledglings half-starved; but that is only to make sure that they work up the motivation to go out and forage for themselves.

An important part of gazing at our backyard birds is to know where to draw the line with your passion. Just the thought of knowing that your home gives shelter to a few little flying angels can be precious; as long as you leave well alone, there is no reason why the whole family cannot participate. - 30447

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